Product Description
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For an assassin, loyalty and treachery dictate life and death
In a BAFTA-winning performance, Edward Woodward (The Equalizer)
stars as Callan, a brooding, conscience-stricken assassin for a
shadowy British intelligence service so secret it doesn’t have a
name.
With the Cold War grinding on, agents from the East and West
engage in elaborate deceptions, both sides seeking temporary
advantage in an endless struggle. No one plays this game better
than Callan. His sharp eyes, steely will, and steady hand with a
make him a valuable asset to his superior, called Hunter
(William Squire, Anne of the Thousand Days). But Callan knows his
usefulness could end at any moment--especially with the younger,
ruthlessly ambitious agent Cross (Patrick Mower, Target) eager to
advance. In this amoral world, where men and women serve only as
means to another’s ends, Callan fully understands the
consequences of failure, seizing each assignment as one more
chance to survive.
DVD FEATURES INCLUDE Callan trivia and biography of Edward
Woodward.
.com
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The murky world of espionage gets a fascinating and aggressively
unheroic in the British series Callan. Callan: Set 1 is
actually the third season of this remarkable show from the late
1960s/early '70s; as it begins, agent and assassin David Callan
(Edward Woodward) is recovering from being in the chest
after killing his superior while under the effects of
brainwashing. His new boss can’t afford to lose Callan--Callan’s
skills are hard to find--but he worries that Callan might have
lost his nerve. Callan demonstrates he can still be ruthless, but
he suffers from pangs of conscience... and when faced with the
grey morality of counterintelligence, makes sometimes futile
attempts to balance out the scales of justice.
At first glance, Callan seems like simply a well-made, realistic
story, in the vein of John le Carre’s intricate novels. But
episode after episode subverts your expectations as Callan and
his ambitious colleague Cross ruin the lives of innocent people
in the name of national security. Callan is a fascinating
creation; moody, bad-tempered, prone to treat his
flunky/stoolpigeon Lonely (Russell Hunter) with a weird, almost
erotic mix of possessiveness and abuse. In another actor’s
hands, he might be downright unpleasant; but Woodward--who later
starred in the series The Equalizer as well as movies like The
Wicker Man and Breaker Morant--is a uniquely compelling actor,
able to make cruelty and moral queasiness strangely magnetic.
Whether he’s ing evidence to ruin a young woman’s engagement
or trying to protect a racist politician from assassination,
Callan comes across as simultaneously appalling and admirable.
Oddly enough, starting with the third season enhances the
program, adding to the hidden motives and secret histories. The
supporting cast is uniformly superb, particularly Hunter as the
squirrelly and aptly-named Lonely, who both loathes and
desperately craves the approval of Callan. This series is
essential viewing for anyone interested in the genre, but may
be even more intriguing to people who don’t like tales of
ridiculous secret agent derring-do--think of Callan as the
anti-James-Bond. --Bret Fetzer